Rhetorical Situation
Rhetorical Appeals
Rhetorical Devices
Methods of Development
Logical Fallacies
100

The person or group intended to read the text and be persuaded by it

Audience

100

Appeals to character, credibility, or trustworthiness

Ethos

100

Figure of speech in which a person, thing, or abstract quality is addressed as if present

Apostrophe

100

Writers relate the characteristics, features, or sensory details of an object or idea, sometimes using examples or illustrations.

Definition or Description
100

Attacking a weaker version of your opponent's position than the one they are actually arguing

Strawman

200

Social, political, cultural, and other factors that affect the writing of a text.

Context

200

Appeals to reason and logic

Logos

200

A literary style used to make fun of or ridicule an idea, human vice, or weakness

Satire

200

Writers present a category of comparison and then examine the similarities and/or differences between the objects of comparison

Comparison-Contrast

200

An argument that uses misleading or unrelated evidence to support a conclusion

Red herring

300

Specific circumstances for which a text is composed

Exigency or Occasion

300

Appeals to the audience's emotions, beliefs, and values

Pathos

300

Placing two items side by side to create a certain effect, reveal an attitude, or accomplish some other purpose

Juxtaposition

300

Writers present a cause and assert effects of that cause, or present a series of causes and the subsequent effect(s)

Cause-Effect

300
A logical fallacy attacking the character of your opponent without addressing their argument

Ad hominem

400

The person who composes a text

Author

400

Treating an abstraction or nonhuman object as if it were a person by giving it human qualities

Personification

400

Writer offers details about real-life experiences and offers reflections and insights on the significance of those experiences

Narration

400

A conclusion that oversimplifies the argument by reducing it to only two sides or choices

Either/or

500

What the author is trying to accomplish in writing a text

Purpose

500

The implication or tone of a word, NOT its dictionary definition

Connotation

500

A faulty conclusion that assumes that, because one thing followed another, it was caused by the other

Post hoc

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